In my quest to further enlighten myself about aspects of homelessness, today I visited the Peace House Community in Minneapolis.

Unlike the service-based organizations organizations I've volunteered with, Peace House is rather stripped down programmatically. It has good coffee and nice new building (its funky storefront with the identifiable mural on Franklin Avenue was taken to redevelop the block with affordable housing). But none of the health care, job services, storage, showers and laundry I've seen elsewhere.

A volunteer comes in periodically to help members draw up living wills. Another comes in and does art. Each day, there's a meditation that's designed to draw people out or to allow them to reflect, less structured than either a church service or an AA meeting.

Peace House serves a light breakfast and a lunch, but unlike the all-comers soup kitchen model, Peace House uses food to foster a sense of community. And that's what the volunteers do as well. We are present and without agenda. We talk and listen. Mostly listen.

I can't say how many of the people I met today even regard themselves as homeless. I would call them experienced. Adrift. Finding stability. Not defining themselves by where they take shelter but perhaps not yet on a path away from where they are now. It'll be awhile before I can fairly say.

Like other places I've been, the community contains diversity. Yes, African-Americans, African immigrants, Native Americans, Hispanics and Anglos, but also the diversity that goes to the heart of individuality, that cracks apart preconceptions, that laughs with an intelligence that includes you one way or the other—as target or fellow wisecracker.

Its paid staff have come from the streets, bringing that combination of empathy and take-no-prisoners bullcrap detection I've seen in other places. The volunteers are mostly like me—liberal-leaning grey hairs with a spiritual streak. The community members, based on a single day's involvement, felt welcoming to me, the first timer.

I got into discussions about poetry and bike riding routes and circumventing bureaucracy. Talking seems to be the point.

From the back porch we watched a couple guys change the wheel on a bicycle next to a truck filled with miscellaneous frames and wheels.

Calvin noted that one of the shade tree mechanics was stabilizing an axel nut with a pair of bolt-cutters.

Nothing's for sale in Lost Springs. According to Coldwell Banker, "In Lost Springs, 50% of homes are owned, 25% are rented, and 25% are not occupied."

We returned from Colorado this week via blue highways, a convoluted route that detoured us north to the Grand Tetons before passing through forlorn towns strung across the high plains.

It's tempting to project gloom through the windshield when you see tiny crossroads like Lost Springs, where the bars are the last businesses to go. Or ranching towns like Lusk, where a substantial brick hotel, repurposed to affordable housing, hints at a more colorful past of railroads, silver mining and radium baths for tourists.

The gloom deepens when you spend a night in Chadron after convincing your co-pilot it has to be a decent place to stay because it's a college town. Well, yeah, a college town for kids from Lusk and North Platte, who might not notice all the downtown buildings that sport historical designation placards in lieu of For Rent signs.

Because nobody's looking to rent.

We had spent the prior day and overnight in Jackson Hole. It's in a beautiful setting, with ready access to trails, steep ski runs and open space with picture-window views of the Tetons in the distance. The streets are lively and downtown storefronts are full. The town supports a couple nice bookstores and a roller derby team. You can drop $250,000 on a grizzly bear painting or watch elk graze in the valley for free.

This 70-acre estate on the Snake River can be yours for only $19 million.

It's not surprising that, in a town where the median home price is $1.2 million and a 1,200-square-foot condo goes for about twice what you'd pay in downtown Minneapolis, Jackson Hole Sotheby's International Realty office occupies half a city block.

The prosperity in these uber-resort towns can be deceiving. The very money that has conserved these views, kept the streams pristine and sprinkled the town with music, art and varied cuisine has also priced out regular folk.

Forget Section Eight projects.

Here, "affordable housing" is for nurses, park rangers, teachers, housekeepers, bartenders and accountants. The president of the Aspen Board of Realtors knows 14 brokers who live in employee housing subsidized by the city to allow working stiffs to be year-round residents.

Even off-season rents have always been tight in these resort towns, but the trend is to knock down anything that comes on the market. Last July owners of Jackson Hole’s largest apartment complex notified tenants of a 40 percent rent hike.

It's not just rent that's overpriced. We saw Sierra Nevada and New Belgium beer 12-packs on sale for what was full price in Minnesota. But there's lots of work in these towns, and if you live where the economy's hurting, you might find a way.

Construction workers drive in from Idaho to Jackson. Steamboat Springs has converted two motels into man camps for the hospitality industry. Aspen collects a real estate tax to subsidize local worker housing. Vail provides some employee housing, but recently suggested workers might ease the crunch by sharing bedrooms.

During ski season, a nephew-in-law commuted from Grand Junction to Breckenridge for a part-time job delivering goods to vacationers. (If he'd stayed there for his days off, he might have found a couch to rent for $200 a week.) Other service workers may live in their cars, sleep in shifts in moldy rentals, shiver in unheated basements or camp during the summer. In Crested Butte, 12 percent of the seasonal workforce summered in tents last year prompting a local biological research station to complain its research sites were being compromised.

Meanwhile, million-dollar homes sit vacant for long stretches of the year.

Most of the time, I blog about homelessness. This is pretty damn close.